System and method for cleaning a tape drive
A system, a method, and article of manufacture are employed to clean the input/output transducers on tape drives, verified by the tape drives reading alphanumeric information from data tracks and servo tracks of a cleaner tape. An aggressive cleaning frontcoat section of the cleaner tape can be used to provide additional cleaning action, and the cleanliness of the data read elements, data write elements, and the servo heads. A less-abrasive cleaning section may be used to clean less difficult types of contaminants. In this manner, the cleanliness of the data read elements, the data write elements, and the servo heads can be verified. A cleaning section may also be used as a leader section of a self-characterization section. Alternatively, a magnetic data tape section may be included for self-characterization.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention is related in general to cleaning tape drives. More particularly, the invention consists of a novel system and method for determining when an input/output transducer of a tape drive is clean.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Storage automation products, such as the IBM 3584 Ultra Scalable Tape Library, provided by International Business Machines (“IBM”)®, include tape drives, one or more robotic accessors, and a plurality of storage cells for tape cartridges. The tape drives traditionally have input/output (“I/O”) transducers known as a tape head or an I/O head. During use, the I/O transducer inside of each tape drive can become contaminated with debris. This requires that the I/O transducer be cleaned with a cleaner tape.
In U.S. Pat. No. 4,893,209, Mohammed Siddiq describes a multifunctional cleaning tape used as part of a video cassette for cleaning the magnetic head of a video cassette recorder (“VCR”) and providing diagnostic/instructional information to a user. The tape includes a first, non-magnetic cleaning segment for cleaning the magnetic head followed by a magnetic diagnostic segment containing prerecorded diagnostic information. The diagnostic information includes information relating to the cleanliness of the magnetic head and for adjusting the VCR for improved visual and audio output and tape tracking. However, Siddiq does not disclose reading servo information as a means of testing the cleanliness of the tape servo head.
In U.S. Pat. No. 5,841,613, Robert DeMaster et al. disclose a cassette having a leader and recordable tape which cleans the various components of the tape path in VCRs by dry scrubbing. Interactive diagnostic and instructional material is recorded on the tape to instruct the operator about the cleaning operation to enable the operator to evaluate progress of the head cleaning operation. However, DeMaster also does not disclose reading servo information as a means of testing the cleanliness of the tape servo head. While the prior art teaches testing for clean data-head elements, none of the prior art teaches testing for clean servo-head elements. Accordingly, it would be advantageous to have a system for cleaning and verifying the servo-head elements are clean utilizing a single tape cartridge.
The type of cleaning media and cleaning motion used to clean a drive head varies with the type of contaminant deposited on the drive head. Additionally, the time allowed to clean a drive head may be limited by host and system timeout conditions. Yet another consideration for cleaner cartridges is that a segment of relatively high-strength leader tape is necessary to allow threading of the tape into the cleaner cartridge during removal and replacement (“R&R”) procedures. If this leader tape is made from highly abrasive material, traditional algorithms for cleaning drive-heads may inadvertently overclean and damage the drive head. These same cleaning algorithms could produce overcleaning and damage to the drive head utilizing other portions of the cleaning tape, if the entire cleaner tape was made using a highly abrasive material. However, if the abrasiveness of the entire cleaner tape is reduced, the effectiveness of the cleaner tape would likewise be reduced and the time to clean difficult contaminants may be insufficient. Therefore, it would be advantageous to utilize a cleaner tape that can remove multiple types of contaminants utilizing multiple types of cleaner without overcleaning and damaging the drive and or requiring an extended period of time to complete.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTIONThe present invention is a system and a method for cleaning the I/O transducer of a tape drive and determining when the I/O transducer is actually clean. This determination is accomplished by the tape drive reading alphanumeric information from data tracks and servo tracks of a cleaner tape. This process includes writing data to the cleaner tape, backhitching, and reading this same data. In this manner, the cleanliness of the data read elements, the data write elements, and the servo read elements can be verified.
The present invention is exemplified utilizing the cleaner cartridge, as taught by U.S. Pat. No. 6,320,719, herein incorporated by reference. A timing based servo permits small variations within components of the servo pattern, which allows the encoding of alphanumeric information within the timing based servo pattern itself. This encoding of alphanumeric information, which is called linear position information (“LPOS”), within the timing based servo is taught by U.S. Pat. No. 5,930,065, also incorporated by reference. The I/O transducer is typically a flat head as taught by U.S. Pat. No. 5,905,613, further incorporated by reference.
The I/O transducer is on an actuator which allows the I/O transducer to be actively positioned across the width of the tape via the timing based servo actively read by the servo-read elements in the I/O transducer, as taught by U.S. Pat. No. 5,689,384, which is assigned to IBM and which is incorporated by reference.
The data cartridge and the cleaner cartridge can have a cartridge memory, which allows the storage and retrieval of information from the data and cleaner cartridge without the use of the tape inside of the cartridge. Such a cartridge memory is taught by U.S. Pat. No. 6,304,416, which is incorporated by reference.
Additionally, the cleaner cartridge may include multiple types of cleaning media, such as an aggressive cleaning frontcoat segment and an alternative frontcoat segment utilizing standard data tape or a reduced-abrasion material. Segments may optionally be magnetic for future use as a self-characterization region. If none of the cleaning segments are magnetic, a magnetic data section may be added for this purpose. Optionally, whichever segment is at the end which will be loaded into a drive head may be strengthened to serve as a leader tape.
Various other purposes and advantages of the invention will become clear from its description in the specification that follows and from the novel features particularly pointed out in the appended claims. Therefore, to the accomplishment of the objectives described above, this invention comprises the features hereinafter illustrated in the drawings, fully described in the detailed description of the preferred embodiments and particularly pointed out in the claims. However, such drawings and description disclose just a few of the various ways in which the invention may be practiced.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
This invention is based on the idea of cleaning the input/output (“I/O”) transducer of a tape drive and determining that the I/O transducer is actually clean. This determination is accomplished by the tape drive reading alphanumeric information from data tracks and servo tracks of a cleaner tape. This process includes writing data to the cleaner tape and reading this same data.
The invention disclosed herein may be implemented as a method, apparatus or article of manufacture using standard programming or engineering techniques to produce software, firmware, hardware, or any combination thereof. The term “article of manufacture” as used herein refers to code or logic implemented in hardware or computer readable media such as optical storage devices, and volatile or non-volatile memory devices. Such hardware may include, but is not limited to, field programmable gate arrays (“FPGAs”), application-specific integrated circuits (“ASICs”), complex programmable logic devices (“CPLDs”), programmable logic arrays (“PLAs”), microprocessors, or other similar processing devices.
Referring to figures, wherein like parts are designated with the same reference numerals and symbols,
Host computers 61,62,63,64,65 are connected to the fabric 66 utilizing I/O interfaces 71,72,73,74,75 respectively to fabric 66. I/O interfaces 71-75 may be any type of I/O interface; for example, a FC loop, a direct attachment to fabric 66 or one or more signal lines used by host computers 71-75 to transfer information respectfully to and from fabric 66. Fabric 66 includes, for example, one or more FC switches 67 used to connect two or more computer networks. In one embodiment, FC switch 67 is a conventional router switch.
Switch 67 interconnects host computers 61-65 to storage 90, 92, 94, and 96 across respective I/O interfaces 76-79. I/O interfaces 76-79 may be any type of I/O interface, for example, a Fibre Channel, Infiniband, Gigabit Ethernet, Ethernet, TCP/IP, iSCSI, SCSI I/O interface or one or more signal lines used by FC switch 67 to transfer information respectfully to and from storage 90, 92, 94, and 96. In the example shown in
An automated data storage library typically comprises one or more controllers to direct the operation of the library. The controller may take many different forms and may include an embedded system, a distributed control system, a personal computer, workstation, etc.
Alternatively, the RAM 103 and/or nonvolatile memory 104 may be contained in the processor 102 as well as the device specific circuits 101 and I/O interface 105. Processor 102 may include an off-the-shelf microprocessor, custom processor, FPGA, ASIC, or other form of discrete logic. RAM 103 is typically used to hold variable data, stack data, executable instructions, etc. The nonvolatile memory 104 may comprise any type of nonvolatile memory such as Electrically Erasable Programmable Read Only Memory (“EEPROM”), flash Programmable Read Only Memory (“PROM”), battery backup RAM, hard disk drive, or other similar device.
The nonvolatile memory 104 is typically used to hold the executable firmware and any nonvolatile data. I/O interface 105 comprises a communication interface that allows processor 102 to communicate with devices external to the controller. Examples of I/O interface 105 include serial interfaces such as RS-232 or USB (Universal Serial Bus), SCSI (Small Computer Systems Interface), Fibre Channel, etc. In addition, I/O interface 105 may comprise a wireless interface such as radio frequency (“RF”) or Infrared. The device specific circuits 101 provide additional hardware to enable the controller 100 to perform unique functions such as motor control of a cartridge gripper, etc.
Device specific circuits 101 may comprise electronics that provide Pulse Width Modulation (PWM) control, Analog to Digital Conversion (ADC), Digital to Analog Conversion (DAC), etc. In addition, all or part of the device specific circuits 101 may reside outside controller 100.
The left hand service bay 13 is shown with a first accessor 18. As discussed above, the first accessor 18 includes a gripper assembly 20 and may include a reading system 22 to read or write identifying information about the data storage media to a cartridge memory. The right hand service bay 14 is shown with a second accessor 28. The second accessor 28 includes a gripper assembly 30 and may include a reading system 32 to read or write identifying information about the data storage media, for example, to a cartridge memory. In the event of a failure or other unavailability of the first accessor 18, or its gripper 20, etc., the second accessor 28 may perform all of the functions of the first accessor 18. The two accessors 18, 28 may share one or more mechanical paths or they may comprise completely independent mechanical paths. In one example, the accessors 18, 28 may have a common horizontal rail with independent vertical rails. The first accessor 18 and the second accessor 28 are described as first and second for descriptive purposes only and this description is not meant to limit either accessor to an association with either the left hand service bay 13, or the right hand service bay 14. In addition, the present invention may operate with fewer or more than two accessors.
In the exemplary library, the first accessor 18 and the second accessor 28 move their grippers in at least two directions, called the horizontal “X” direction and vertical “Y” direction, to retrieve and grip, or to deliver and release the data storage media at the storage shelves 16 and to load and unload the data storage media at the data storage drives 15.
The exemplary library 10 receives commands from one or more host systems 40, 41, 42 or for example, hosts 61-65 shown in
The exemplary library is controlled by a distributed control system receiving the logical commands from hosts, determining the required actions, and converting the actions to physical movements of first accessor 18 and/or second accessor 28.
In the exemplary library, the distributed control system includes a plurality of processor nodes 50, each having one or more processors. In one example of a distributed control system, a communication processor node 50 may be located in a storage frame 11. The communication processor node provides a communication link for receiving the host commands, either directly or through the drives 15, via at least one external interface, e.g., coupled to line 80.
The communication processor node 50 may additionally provide a communication link 70 for communicating with the data storage drives 15. The communication processor node 50 may be located in the frame 11, close to the data storage drives 15. Additionally, in an example of a distributed processor system, one or more additional work processor nodes are provided, which may comprise, e.g., a work processor node 52 that may be located at first accessor 18 and that is coupled to the communication processor node 50 via a network 60, 157. A second work processor node 252 that may be located at second accessor 28 and that is coupled to the communication processor node 50 via a network 60, 200 may also be provided. Each work processor node may respond to received commands that are broadcast to the work processor nodes from any communication processor node, and the work processor node may also direct the operation of first accessor 18, providing move commands. An XY processor node 55 may be provided and may be located at an XY system of first accessor 18. The XY processor node 55 is coupled to the network 60, 157, and is responsive to the move commands, operating the XY system to position the gripper 20. Similarly, an XY processor node 255 may be provided and may be located at an XY system of second accessor 28. The XY processor node 255 is coupled to the network 60.
Also, an operator panel processor node 59 may be provided at the optional operator panel 23 for providing an interface for communicating between the operator panel and the communication processor node 50, the work processor node 52, and the XY processor node 55.
A network, with a common bus 60, is provided, coupling the various processor nodes. The network may include a robust wiring network, such as the commercially available Controller Area Network (“CAN”) bus system, which is a multi-drop network, having a standard access protocol and wiring standards, for example, as defined by the CAN in Automation Association (“CiA”). Other networks, such as Ethernet, or wireless network systems, such as RF or infrared, may be employed in the library as is known to those of skill in the art. In addition, multiple independent networks may also be used to couple the various processor nodes.
The communication processor node 50 is coupled to each of the data storage drives 15 of a storage frame 11, via lines 70, communicating with the drives and with host systems 40, 41 and 42. Alternatively, the host systems may be directly coupled to the communication processor node 50, at input 80 for example, or to control port devices (not shown) which connect the library to the host systems with a library interface similar to the drive/library interface. As is known to those of skill in the art, various communication arrangements may be employed for communication with the hosts and with the data storage drives. In the example of
The data storage drives 15 may be in close proximity to the communication processor node 50, and may employ a short distance communication scheme, such as SCSI, or a serial connection, such as RS-422. The data storage drives 15 are thus individually coupled to the communication processor node 50 by means of lines 70. Alternatively, the data storage drives 15 may be coupled to the communication processor node 50 through one or more networks, such as a common bus network.
Also in
Additional storage frames 11 may be provided and each is coupled to the adjacent storage frame. Any of the storage frames 11 may comprise communication processor nodes 50, storage shelves 16, data storage drives 15, and networks 60.
In
Tape 801 preferrably consists of an aggressive cleaning frontcoat section 803 and an alternative frontcoat section 804 consisting of either standard data tape or tape coated with metal particles for non-aggressive cleaning. The aggressive cleaning frontcoat section 803 preferably consists of a coating of chromium dioxide (CrO2) particles, as chromium dioxide particles are somewhat more abrasive than metal particles. An exemplary chromium dioxide frontcoat section 803 is taught by U.S. Pat. No. 4,525,424, which is herein incorporated by reference. Alternately, frontcoat section 803 could contain alumina (Al203), chrome-3 (Cr203), or silicon dioxide (SiO2) particles. The alternative frontcoat section 804 may include metal particles as taught by U.S. Pat. No. 5,534,345, which is also herein incorporated by reference. Typical metal particles which could be used in the alternative frontcoat section 804 are oxide-coated iron metal or magnetic ferrites such as barium ferrite. Alternately, alternative frontcoat section 804 could alternately be magneto-optical or optical phase-change tape.
On the free end of tape 801 is leader pin 802. When tape cartridge 700 is slid into drive 15, sliding door 706 is opened, and tape drive 15 threads leader pin 802 and attached tape 801 through the tape path. Sliding door 706 is normally closed when tape cartridge 700 is not in use, so that external debris and contaminants do not enter tape cartridge 700 and degrade tape 801. Cleaner tape 801 preferrably has an aggressive cleaning frontcoat section 803 made from a material such as chromium dioxide (CrO2) which tends to be more aggressive and thus better at cleaning stubborn debris from the magnetic transducer. Cleaner tape 801 also has an alternative frontcoat section 804, which may utilize the same formulation as actual data tapes for further cleaning of the magnetic transducer and for testing the overall cleaning process. Typically, the alternative frontcoat section 804 includes metal particles. Alternately, tape 801 may use the identical formulation of tape for both data and cleaning purposes. The contents of cartridge memory 703 are used to distinguish tape cartridge 700 as either a data cartridge or a cleaner cartridge.
Whichever segment is closest to the free end of the tape 801 may double as a leader tape, if made from a sufficiently strong material. If none of the segments are magnetic, the calibration region 807 may include magnetic data tape used for self-characterization.
Chromium dioxide cleaner section 803 and alternative frontcoat section 804 are typically spliced together at splice 806. This splice may be straight across, i.e., perpendicular to the edge of the tape, as shown in
The alternative frontcoat section 804 may include timing-based servo information 900, as illustrated in
Alternative frontcoat section 804 has a plurality of data tracks 910. I/O transducer 1100, discussed in greater detail in
The timing-based servo information 900 contains alphanumeric information, called linear position information (“LPOS”), as illustrated in
Tape drives may be storage 90, 92, and 94 in library 98, or Network Attached Storage 96 as shown in
If, the determination is yes in step 1203, because the drive in question has been cleaned less than C times, the process flows to step 1204, where a cleaner cartridge is located. Such a cleaner cartridge may be cartridge 700 shown in
Once a “GOOD” cleaner cartridge is loaded into drive 15 in step 1210, the process flows to step 1212, where the cleaner tape 801 is threaded through the tape path (not shown) via the use of leader pin 802 and then the cleaner tape 801 is moved across I/O transducer 1100. After a predetermined amount of cleaner tape is moved across I/O transducer 1100, the process flows to decision step 1214, where the determination is made whether the servo heads 1102 can read the alphanumeric information which is stored in binary form in LPOS 1000 with acceptable quality. If the determination in step 1214 is “yes”, the servo heads 1102 are declared clean and the process flows to decision step 1216, where the determination is made whether data-read elements 1103 can read a pre-written test pattern in data tracks 910 with acceptable quality. If the determination is yes in step 1216, data-read elements 1103 are declared clean and the process flows to step 1218 where data-write elements 1104 write a test pattern to data tracks 910, at a different location on tape 801 than the pre-written test pattern used to test data-read elements 1103. The process flows to decision step 1220, where the determination is made whether data-read elements 1103 can read the test pattern written by data-write elements 1104 with acceptable quality. If the decision is “yes” in step 1220, tape drive 15 is reported as “CLEAN” in step 1222. The process flows from step 1222 to step 1230, where the results of the cleaning are stored in cartridge memory 703 of cleaner cartridge 700, and then the process returns to the location from which it was originated in step 1232.
If the decision in steps 1214, 1216, or 1220 was no, the process flows to step 1227, where a jump is made to step 1401 of flowchart 1400. Flowchart 1400 governs the use of the aggressive cleaning section 803. The process flows from step 1401 to decision step 1402, where the determination is made whether counter SCRUB exceeds MaxScrub. If the decision is yes, that counter SCRUB exceeds MaxScrub, then the maximum number of iterations of the aggressive cleaning section have been used and the head has not yet been cleaned. The process then flows to step 1404, where a jump is made to step 1228 of flowchart 1200, where the drive is declared “dirty.” From step 1228, the process flows to step to step 1230, where the results of the cleaning are stored in cartridge memory 703 of cleaner cartridge 700, and then the process returns to the location from which it was originated in step 1232. The information stored in cartridge memory 703 regarding the DIRTY tape drive includes whether the data-read elements, data-write elements, or servo heads were the elements which were unable to be cleaned satisfactorily.
If in step 1402, the decision is no, the process flows to step 1406 where the aggressive cleaning section 803 is scrubbed across the magnetic transducer. The process flows to step 1408, where SCRUB is incremented by one, to indicate the cleaning action in step 1406. Then, the process flows to step 1410, where the process jumps to step 1212 of flowchart 1200, for another round of testing of the servo heads, the read elements, and the write elements.
The flowchart of
Once tape drive 15 is cleaned with alternate cleaner cartridge 700, the process returns from flowchart 1200 and proceeds to decision step 1312, where the determination is made whether tape drive 15 is still dirty by interrogating the results in step 1222 of
Those skilled in the art of cleaning servo-head elements may develop other embodiments of the present invention. The terms and expressions which have been employed in the foregoing specification are used herein as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention in the use of such terms and expressions of excluding equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, it being recognized that the scope of the invention is defined and limited only by the claims which follow.
Claims
1. A method for cleaning a tape drive having an input/output transducer, said input/output transducer having servo heads, comprising the steps of:
- detecting a degraded status of the input/output transducer;
- selecting and inserting a cleaner cartridge into the tape drive, said cleaner cartridge including a cleaner tape, wherein the cleaner tape includes first timing-based servo information;
- moving the cleaner tape over the input/output transducer;
- reading said first timing-based servo information from the cleaner tape; and
- ascertaining a first cleanliness status of the servo heads based on a reading of the first timing-based servo information read from the cleaner tape.
2. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 1, wherein the first timing-based servo information includes servo stripes.
3. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 1, wherein the first timing-based servo information includes alpha-numeric information.
4. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 3, wherein the alpha-numeric information includes linear position (“LPOS”) information.
5. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 1, wherein the step of detecting a degraded status of the input/output transducer includes evaluating a servo frame rate error.
6. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 1, wherein the step of detecting a degraded status of the input/output transducer includes evaluating the amount of error correction performed by the tape drive.
7. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 1, wherein the step of detecting a degraded status of the input/output transducer includes evaluating the amount of error recovery performed by the tape drive.
8. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 1, wherein the step of detecting a degraded status of the input/output transducer includes the step of monitoring of read/write amplitude information.
9. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 8, wherein the monitoring of read/write amplitude information occurs within a calibration region.
10. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 9, wherein the calibration region includes magnetic data tape for self-characterization.
11. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 1, further comprising the step of recording the degraded status of the input/output transducer.
12. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 1, further comprising the steps of including a cartridge memory in the cleaner cartridge and recording the degraded status of the input/output transducer in the cartridge memory.
13. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 1, further comprising the steps of:
- if the degraded status is DIRTY, selecting and inserting an alternate cleaner cartridge into the tape drive, wherein the alternate cleaner cartridge includes second timing-based servo information;
- moving the alternate cleaner cartridge over said input/output transducer;
- reading said second timing-based servo information from said alternate cleaner cartridge; and
- ascertaining the first cleanliness status of the servo heads based on a reading of the second timing-based servo information.
14. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 1, wherein the cleaner cartridge includes an aggressive cleaning frontcoat section and an alternative frontcoat section.
15. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 14, wherein the cleaner tape includes a free end, the free end is located within the aggressive cleaning frontcoat section, and the aggressive cleaning frontcoat section is utilized as a leader tape.
16. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 14, wherein the cleaner tape includes a free end, the free end is located within the alternative frontcoat section, and the alternative frontcoat section is utilized as a leader tape.
17. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 14, wherein a first cleaning motion is utilized for applying the aggressive cleaning frontcoat section to the input/output transducer and a second cleaning motion is utilized for applying the alternative frontcoat section to the input/output transducer.
18. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 17, wherein the first cleaning motion is a streaming motion.
19. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 17, wherein the first cleaning motion is a backhitch motion.
20. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 14, wherein the aggressive cleaning frontcoat section includes particles chosen from the group of chromium dioxide, alumina, chrome-3, and silicon dioxide.
21. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 14, wherein the alternative frontcoat section includes standard data tape.
22. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 14, wherein the alternative frontcoat section includes metal particles for non-aggressive cleaning.
23. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 22, wherein the metal particles include magnetic ferrites.
24. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 23, wherein the magnetic ferrites includes barium ferrite.
25. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 14, wherein the alternative frontcoat section includes oxide-coated iron metal.
26. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 14, wherein the alternative frontcoat section includes magneto-optical tape.
27. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 14, wherein the alternative frontcoat section includes optical phase-change tape.
28. The method of cleaning a tape drive of claim 1, wherein the input/output transducer includes read elements and write elements, further comprising the steps of:
- reading pre-written data from the cleaner tape;
- ascertaining a second cleanliness status of the read elements of the drive head based on the reading pre-written data;
- writing first new data to a portion of the cleaner tape;
- reading second new data from said portion of the cleaner tape;
- ascertaining a third cleanliness status of the write elements of the input/output transducer based on a correspondence of the second new data to the first new data.
29. A tape drive cleaning system, comprising:
- a tape drive including an input/output transducer, said input/output transducer including servo heads; and
- a tape cartridge including a cleaner tape, wherein the cleaner tape includes timing-based servo information;
- wherein the cleaner tape is moved over the input/output transducer, the servo heads read the timing-based servo information, and the tape drive utilizes the timing-based information read by the servo heads to ascertain a cleanliness status of the drive head.
30. The tape drive cleaning system of claim 29, wherein the timing-based servo information includes servo stripes.
31. The tape drive cleaning system of claim 29, wherein the timing-based servo information includes alpha-numeric information.
32. The tape drive cleaning system of claim 31, wherein the alpha-numeric information includes linear position (“LPOS”) information.
33. The tape drive cleaning system of claim 29, wherein the cleaner cartridge includes an aggressive cleaning frontcoat section.
34. The tape drive cleaning system of claim 33, wherein the aggressive cleaning frontcoat section includes particles chosen from the group of chromium dioxide, alumina, chrome-3, and silicon dioxide.
35. An article of manufacture including a data storage medium, said data storage medium including a set of machine-readable instructions that are executable by a processing device to implement an algorithm, said algorithm comprising the steps of:
- detecting a degraded status of an input/output transducer of a tape drive;
- selecting and inserting a cleaner cartridge into the tape drive, said cleaner cartridge including a cleaner tape, wherein the cleaner tape contains timing-based servo information;
- moving the cleaner tape over the input/output transducer;
- reading said timing-based servo information from the cleaner tape; and
- ascertaining a cleanliness status of the input/output transducer based on the timing-based servo information read from the cleaner tape.
36. The article of manufacture of claim 35, wherein the timing-based servo information includes servo stripes.
37. The article of manufacture of claim 36, wherein the timing-based servo information includes alpha-numeric information.
38. The article of manufacture of claim 37, wherein the alpha-numeric information includes linear position (“LPOS”) information.
39. The article of manufacture of claim 35 wherein the cleaner cartridge includes an aggressive cleaning frontcoat section.
40. The article of manufacture of claim 39, wherein the aggressive cleaning frontcoat section includes particles chosen from the group of chromium dioxide, alumina, chrome-3, and silicon dioxide.
41. A tape drive cleaning system, comprising:
- a tape drive including an input/output transducer, said input/output transducer including servo heads; and
- a tape cartridge including a cleaner tape, wherein the cleaner tape includes an aggressive cleaning frontcoat section and an alternative frontcoat section;
- wherein the cleaner tape further includes timing based servo information and the cleaner tape is moved over the input/output transducer, the servo heads read the timing-based servo information, and the tape drive utilizes the timing-based information read by the servo heads to ascertain a cleanliness status of the drive head.
42. The tape drive cleaning system of claim 41, wherein the aggressive cleaning frontcoat section includes particles chosen from the group of chromium dioxide, alumina, chrome-3, and silicon dioxide.
43. A tape cartridge, comprising:
- an exterior cartridge shell;
- a tape reel; and
- a cleaner tape including an aggressive cleaning frontcoat section and an alternative frontcoat section.
44. The tape cartridge of claim 43, wherein the cleaner tape further includes timing-based servo information adapted to be read by an input/output transducer to ascertain a cleanliness status of a drive head.
45. The tape cartridge of claim 44, wherein the timing-based servo information includes servo stripes.
46. The tape cartridge of claim 45, wherein the timing-based servo information includes alpha-numeric information.
47. The tape cartridge of claim 46, wherein the alpha-numeric information includes linear position (“LPOS”) information.
48. The tape cartridge of claim 44, wherein the cleaner tape further includes a cartridge memory adapted to record a degraded status of the drive head.
49. The tape cartridge of claim 43, wherein the cleaner tape further includes a free end, the free end is located within the aggressive cleaning frontcoat section, and the aggressive cleaning frontcoat section is adapted to be used as a leader tape.
50. The tape cartridge of claim 43, wherein the cleaner tape further includes a free end, the free end is located within the alternative frontcoat section, and the alternative frontcoat section is adapted to be used as a leader tape.
51. The tape cartridge of claim 43, wherein the aggressive cleaning frontcoat section includes particles chosen from the group of oxide-coated iron metal particles, chromium dioxide, alumina, chrome-3, and silicon dioxide.
52. The tape cartridge of claim 43, wherein the alternative frontcoat section includes standard data tape.
53. The tape cartridge of claim 43, wherein the alternative frontcoat section includes metal particles for non-aggressive cleaning.
54. The tape cartridge of claim 53, wherein the metal particles include magnetic ferrites.
55. The tape cartridge of claim 54, wherein the magnetic ferrites include barium ferrite.
Type: Application
Filed: Sep 10, 2004
Publication Date: Apr 6, 2006
Patent Grant number: 7394618
Inventors: Robert Biskeborn (Hollister, CA), Ernest Gale (Tucson, AZ), James Karp (Tucson, AZ), Lee Randall (Tucson, AZ), Daniel Winarski (Tucson, AZ)
Application Number: 10/937,965
International Classification: G11B 19/02 (20060101);